Korean Air Lines Flight 007

Korean Air Lines Flight 007 (KAL 007) was a scheduled Korean Air Lines flight from New York City to Seoul via Anchorage, Alaska. On September 1, 1983, the South Korean airliner servicing the flight was shot down by a Soviet Su-15 interceptor. The airliner was en route from Anchorage to Seoul, but due to a navigational mistake made by the KAL crew the airliner deviated from its original planned route and flew through Soviet prohibited airspace around the time of a U.S. aerial reconnaissance mission. The Soviet Air Forces treated the unidentified aircraft as an intruding U.S. spy plane, and destroyed it with air-to-air missiles, after firing warning shots which were likely not seen by the KAL pilots. The Korean airliner eventually crashed in the sea near Moneron Island west of Sakhalin in the Sea of Japan. All 269 passengers and crew aboard were killed, including Larry McDonald, a United States Representative from Georgia. The Soviets found the wreckage under the sea on September 15, and found the flight recorders in October, but this information was kept secret until 1992.

The incident was one of the most tense moments of the Cold War and resulted in an escalation of anti-Soviet sentiment, particularly in the United States.

Quotes

 * What civilian? [It] has flown over Kamchatka! It [came] from the ocean without identification. I am giving the order to attack if it crosses the State border.
 * General Anatoly Kornukov, commander of Dolinsk-Sokol Air Base during KAL 007 shootdown, Korean Air Lines Flight 007 transcripts


 * The target is destroyed.
 * Major Gennadiy Osipovich, Soviet Air Force pilot of the Su-15 interceptor that shot down KAL 007, mistakenly reports KAL 007 is destroyed, Korean Air Lines Flight 007 transcripts


 * Roger, Korean Air 007...ah, we are experiencing...
 * Song Dong-hui, first officer of KAL 007, in radio contact with Tokyo ATC in the aftermath of missile attack on KAL 007, Korean Air Lines Flight 007 transcripts


 * Stand by. Stand by. Stand by. Stand by. Set.
 * Last words from KAL 007 cockpit before the end of CVR recording, Korean Air Lines Flight 007 transcripts


 * Five days after the Soviets shot down KAL 007, I went on nationwide television to urge that all of us in the civilized world make sure such an atrocity never happens again. And I pledged to you that night, we would cooperate with other countries to improve the safety of civil aviation, asking them to join us in not accepting the Soviet airline Aeroflot as a normal member of the international civil air community -- not, that is, until the Soviets satisfy the cries of humanity for justice.
 * Ronald Reagan, President of the United States, "Radio Address to the Nation on the Soviet Attack on a Korean Civilian Airliner" (September 17, 1983)


 * There were no circumstances that can justify the unprecedented attack on an unarmed commercial aircraft.
 * Larry Speakes, acting White House Press Secretary, "U.S. says Soviet Downed Korean Airliner; 269 Lost; Reagan Denounces 'Wanton' Act" (September 02, 1983)


 * I don't know anything - just that my mother is dead.
 * Sung Sheen Uhm, daughter of KAL 007 passenger Ok Soon Chung, "'A Terrible Loss': Loved Ones Recall The Passengers On Korean Plane" (September 3, 1993)


 * Help me get my daughter back - I want my daughter back! Please, please help me!
 * Lu Chi Pan, mother of KAL 007 passenger Lee Mei Pan, "'A Terrible Loss': Loved Ones Recall The Passengers On Korean Plane" (September 3, 1993)


 * I am heartbroken and have had nightmares because my best friend is dead. My Daddy and Mummy told me that some Russian men killed her and many, many other people, too. I asked Daddy why the Russians are so cruel. Yuen Wai-Sum was eight and was my best friend. Now we can never play together again. Why? You are the leader of the Russians, can you tell me why Russians have to kill her? I want to name offerings to Wai-Sum, to give her some fresh flowers and to pay respect to her spirit. May I? You are the leader. If you say yes, then it must be okay.
 * Choi Man-Yee, close friend of KAL 007 passenger Yuen Wai-Sum, in a letter written to Soviet leader Yuri Andropov on KAL 007 shootdown, A 9-year-old Hong Kong girl has written to Soviet... (September 4, 1983)


 * Question I asked myself when I heard of his death is “Why Loc, of all people?” It seemed so unfair. Why not some multiple murderer on death row or some drunken bum? Worst of all, why did he die the way he did? I could understand and handle the death of a friend from diseases, but for him to be shot down on an airliner hurts me to the bottom of my soul.
 * John Holland, close friend of KAL 007 passenger Loc Dang, Elon student remembers lost friend (September 29, 1983)


 * We have been struggling for years to know what happened to our loved ones. Now we face the agonizing recognition that their death was neither painless nor instant.
 * Hans Ephraimson-Abt, Chairman of the American Association for Families of K.A.L. 007 victims, "Tape Displays the Anguish On Jet the Soviets Downed" (October 16, 1992)


 * The plane was over Soviet territory for about two hours, so it can hardly be assumed that this was an unplanned action. We should make it clear in our statements that this was a gross violation of international conventions. It is no use keeping quiet now, we must go on the offensive.
 * Mikhail Gorbachev, General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union at a poliburo meeting, "Yeltsin turns over KAL Jet Transcripts" (October 15, 1992)


 * There have been many books written about KAL 007 in the West, but the only living eyewitnesses to this tragedy are in the Soviet Union. The world is interested in the facts of what happened. But for me, what is most important is that ordinary Soviet citizens are opening their lips after so many years of silence. By talking, we become normal people.


 * I am far from thinking that the blame for this tragedy lies entirely on us. The passengers on board KAL 007 had become the hostages of two great powers colliding with each other. They were condemned to die.
 * Andrey Illesh, national news editor of Soviet newspaper Izvestia,"Soviet Journalists Attack KAL Story" (May 26, 1991)


 * I was just next to him, on the same altitude, 150 meters to 200 meters away. I saw two rows of windows and knew that this was a Boeing. I knew this was a civilian plane. But for me this meant nothing. It is easy to turn a civilian type of plane into one for military use.


 * I would have landed him on our airfield, and I wanted it very much. Do you think I wanted to kill him? I would rather have shared a bottle with him.
 * Major Gennadiy Osipovich, Soviet Air Force pilot of the Su-15 interceptor that shot down KAL 007, "Ex-Soviet Pilot Still Insists KAL 007 Was Spying" (December 9, 1996)


 * Until we know what final explanation [the Soviets] give and we have made a judgment on that explanation, it is premature to say what we are going to do about it.
 * Pierre Trudeau, Prime Minister of Canada, "Flight Into Darkness" (September 12, 1983)


 * We have found new material on KAL 007. I know that sixty percent of the passengers were American. I am prepared to give you all the materials we have found.  Perhaps one possibility is if some family members could come over and meet with me and discuss this.  They could bring the materials back to you, including the black box.
 * Boris Yeltsin, President of Russia in a September 19, 1992 phone call with U.S President George Bush, "“Attention Emergency Descent” – From KAL 007 TO MH 17?" (July 18, 2014)


 * The sophisticated provocation masterminded by the US special services with the use of a South Korean plane is an example of extreme adventurism in politics.
 * Yuri Andropov, General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, in a 1983 statement, "Target destroyed: The hidden secret of KAL 007" (September 24, 2013)


 * Within hours, story began circulating in Washington that the Soviets have been involved.
 * James Oberg, American space journalist and historian, Season 9 episode of TV series Mayday "Target is Destroyed" (2010)


 * The recollections bring back some unpleasant feelings. Those events left scars and added some gray hairs to my head. I will always be convinced that I gave the right order. Sometimes, in strategic operations, we had to sacrifice battalions to save the army.
 * General Anatoly Kornukov, then commander of Dolinsk-Sokol Air Base during KAL 007 shootdown, in an 1998 interview, Anatoly Kornukov, Who Led Russian Air Force, Dies at 72 (July 1, 2014)
 * Cold War international tensions rose to a peak in 1983, with the deployment of Cruise and Pershing missiles in Western Europe exciting Soviet concern and anger, and the Soviets fearing attack under the cover of Able Archer, a NATO military exercise held from 2 to 11 November. Reagan going aloft in his command plane during the exercise worried the Soviets. Moreover, the unrepentant Soviet shooting down on 1 September 1983, over Soviet airspace, of Korean Airlines flight 007, suspected of espionage, increased tension. Two hundred and sixty-nine people, including an American congressman, were on the plane.
 * Jeremy Black, The Cold War: A Military History (2015)


 * The destruction of the airliner and its immediate aftermath reaffirmed the Soviet Union's and the United States' essential distrust of each other and ended any hope of an immediate solution to the expanding nuclear arms race. Late November 1983 saw the failure of the European peace campaign as the West German parliament voted to accept 108 medium-range Pershing II missiles for deployment and the Reagan administration immediately began shipping missile components. The Soviets, as expected, broke off the strategic arms reduction negotiations in Geneva, accusing Washington of "wrecking" the talks and describing the Germans as "nuclear maniacs."
 * Seymour Hersh, journalist, The Target Is Destroyed: What Really Happened To Flight 007 And What America, p. 244 (1986)


 * Those who ran the American government did not want to learn that the Soviets had been honestly confused and panic-stricken about the enemy intruder.
 * Seymour Hersh, journalist, Soviets Thought They Were Downing Spy Plane, Report Says (August 25, 1986)